1: Extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof. If it does what it says, you should have no problem with this.
2: What proof will you accept that you are wrong? You ask us to change our mind, but we cannot change yours?
3: It is not our responsibility to disprove your claims, but rather your responsibility to prove them.
4. Personal testamonials are not proof.

1: Extraordinary claims require extraordinary proof. If it does what it says, you should have no problem with this.
2: What proof will you accept that you are wrong? You ask us to change our mind, but we cannot change yours?
3: It is not our responsibility to disprove your claims, but rather your responsibility to prove them.
4. Personal testamonials are not proof.

I think he’s talking about the bit before that, with Night on Bald Mountain and Chernabog (A slavic pagan diety, not actually a depiction of Satan/Lucifer/The Devel/etc.) summoning forth various horrors until daylight (and the Ave Maria sequence) drives him back to slumber.

Actually, it’s the coming dawn and the chiming of the church bells that drives him back to slumber, & after that the nun’s procession w/Ave Maria begings ( but that’s just nitpicking).

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“Facts are meaningless - you could use facts to prove anything that’s even remotely true!

“Weaseling out of things is what separates us from the animals. Except the weasel.” ... H Simpson

“The voices in my head may not be real, but they have some good ideas.”

Wow! Never saw Fantasia .... one of the few Disney movies I’ve never seen and I’ve no idea how I ever managed that.

I’m also baffled at the complexity of this thread from a Disney film to all the interesting pics that be concocted connecting-the-dots over a single geographical site. What mostly amazes me is the black side of the human mind that continually has to focus on dark ideas, plots, conspiracies formed out of ridiculousness.

I am often disappointed by terrible and tragic things humans do. I think there is little to inoculate against these except to refuse to indulge at least in the obvious games. Individuals have the power, under most circumstances, to select what they will watch, listen to and read. Most of us can select to ‘not play the game’.